Return of the Brahmin
by P.L. Zutshi
The Brahmin from Kashmir has
been caricatured time and
again by historians and
travellers alike as an
‘anthropological’ species. The interest
has been to describe the population
strains in the unique territory i.e. the
valley of Kashmir, the Himalayas
around and the associated natural
grace and abundance of natural
loveliness. The Brahmin featured
specially for their erudite scholarship
in theology, logic and philosophy
combine.
Kashmir was an erstwhile ‘lake’ in
geological times, which after drying
and desiccation developed into the
Vitasta valley and got populated by the
Brahmin from the Shardian stock
joining the original inhabitants, the
Nagas and the like. In course of time
after few millennia, Kashmir too
turned into a territory of the rulers
and the ruled.
This ‘Brahmin’ from the Sharda-Desh is identified by the same
definition and meaning as is offered
in the Manusimiriti. Along with this
given tag, these people tilled land
reared cattle and were engaged, very
seriously, in prayer penance and
introspection. They thus
constituted a strict
socio-religious people
interested in
persuasion of Sanatan
knowledge, which
necessitated a search
for the source of
awareness. The Brahmin knew well,
that, the Self in relation with the
environment constitutes the
necessary element of knowledge of
self and its persuits. The song, 'vassudeva kutambkum' was already in
air, along with the need and necessity
of ‘Gods’ representing earth, water,
fire, crop, rain etc. also recognized.
Foreground :
The Brahmin from Kashmir is none
other than an offshoot of the parent
stock of Indus Valley Civilisation. Age
dating of this civilisational order being
a scientific activity may as well get
set by assessment of the pace of
human evolution, genetics and by
working back on the processes of
initiation of the rich philosophy, which
by no imagination could be a day's
work. It is believed to be very deep in
time and may have no match, however
to the current inferences. We have at
present no authentic data on the rate
at which genetic changes take place,
changing also the intellectual order
of humans that responds to the growth
order. From the earliest state of
organized living to a reasonable level
of maturity in thought processes,
should without any doubt or
exaggeration require a long period of time. The recovery of clay figurine and
seals from Harappa-Mohanjudharu
sites, should be enough only to serve
to the extent that ‘Indus’ people had
begun to observe and think in terms
of means and methods of engaging
children. It is a branch stage for
remote from the maturity level in
thought processes and introspection.
The human thought process where
mind gets well organized such that the
organized thought enters into the
realms of being established, should
take much longer time, not less than
as a few millennia.
Ten thousand years B.C. could be
the area of time when the Brahmin
from lower reaches of Indus valley
travelled north and along the river
valley into Krishenganga-Karnah
valley. This terrain including
Afghanistan, Gandhar, Gilgit, Chilas
later developed into ‘ Sharda Mandal’ (Sharda-Desh). It thus developed into
synonymous concept as Sharda
civilization, backed up by Sharda
language. Sharda language, as
revealed later, is told to be having an
edge over Sanskrit. The place ‘Sharda’
situated along the west bank of
Krishenganga river environmentally
turned out be a most suited place to
build Vihars (Hermitages), temple
complexes and the language. This
place steals the honour of being
designated as ‘ Sharda Peeth’ or in real
the seat of learning. We also know of
‘Sharda University’ where scholars
used to gather for research and
discourse.
We may be thus in a position to
believe, even emphatically, that the
full blown Sharda civilization
descended into the Kashmir valley
when the later had become completely
habitable post desiccation of the
Satisar lake. The flat fertile land was
an invitation for labour, invitation for
tilling and cultivation. It also appeared
to be an abode secluded enough in the
lap of Himalayas to pursue prayer and
penance.
With the last phase of glaciations
around ten thousand years B.C., began
the Neolithic period and the end phase
of ‘Kerewa lake’ sedimentation. Packed
with event stories, Kashmir registers
tectonic activity at intervals. And
another rise of Pir-Panjal took place,
close to the beginning of the last phase
of Stone Age. With it, Vitasta had made
its appearance as of now meandering
through the broad flat valley. Looking
over at the valley flat from the
mountain slope, three prominent
hilltops i.e. ‘Hariparbat’,
‘Shankaracharya’ and ‘Khrew’
appeared most picturesque and eye-catching.
The Shardian :
The small Brahmin population at
Sharda in their long stay had in an
option-less compulsive state, begun to
appreciate nature in all its shades and
nuances. A unique awareness and
extraordinary perspective had already
dawned on these people. They had
begun to recite nature and draw nectar
out of it. "Who knows what was it before
it was Naught?" This sentence caters
to a train of expression. It necessitates
to deliberate seriously on the
‘nothingness’ and create enough logic
to live by until finality gets known. The
Brahmin thus gets on to know, the
hard way, the secrets embedded in
and around the daily observation. The
deep engrossment in nature of ‘ Space’
‘ Water’, ‘ Heat’, ‘ Air’ and ‘ Earth’
provided
them with enough logic to confirm for
good the importance to the objective
world. This complete experience built
the fundamentals of knowledge. The
‘Vedic’ verse thus rhymes out as an
irresistible impulse in praise of
‘Nature’, its beauty and importance.
The expression given to the details
would never cherish an option. For the
population, life at Sharda was exiting
and demanding. Their daily chore in
the intense cold turned to be tough
and challenging but their pleasure
unbound in search of an absolute
attunement with ‘ Nature’ ‘ Prakrati’,
they believed, was their only guide in
search of knowledge frontiers. They
adapted to it in full awareness and
willingly despite the relatively harsh
environment. They attended to a
routine around Vihars and temples,
the cattle and the fields, and made
life to vibrate happiness in experience
and an ultimate ‘Joy’ in living. The
Brahmin packed his/her day with work
of sorts which included making for the
living and life. The habitat comprised
a mud hut dimly lit with crude
thatched roofing and of partially
finished wooden frames and doors. The
walls were plastered with mud both
inside and out, yet sweeped clean with
clay wash, which is bright and dense.
The porch and the entrance were
equally clean plastered with cow dung
and clay. The courtyard was looking
as an established space and as
required by a peasant family. This
style of life continued at Sharda for a
few millennia with the Brahmin
developing as a master of himself.
Their faith in the philosophy that
‘nature was the principal provider and
it received back all that is left’, was
profound.
Word ‘ Sharda’ got coined to connote
a figurine of the ‘Goddess’ of
knowledge and learning and hence the
place where lived the people who
pursued learning ‘nature’ with belief
in it. The temple at Sharda was central
and surrounded by vihars. It was
designed in intricate geometrical
pattern and a ‘domal’ frame, in
accordance to the dome faces of the
‘cubic’ crystal of diamond. The temple
was small yet with very thick and
massive stonewalls. It had a low and
well designed triangular arcade type
entrance, intended to replicate
Cosmos and thus also the universal
oneness. It had as well a low stone
terrace (Parikrama).
The sanctum is a spring covered
by a stone slab symbolizing the
Mother Divine. The slab bears
the engraved 'Srichakara'
(unconfirmed). This intricately
designed geometrical figure of
forty-three triangles within
three concentric circles and an
outer square frame with four
entrances. To many of us it
symbolizes the womb of the
Universe in two-dimensional
geometry with every line and
triangle given a meaning. To
add a bit of logic, the 'Srichakra' should conveniently
represent the projection of full
blown ‘domal’ faces of a
diamond crystal. Diamond
portrays nature’s absolute
perfection in form and inner
reflectance of a crystal.
Diamond incidentally is the
hardest substance known. If
ever nature is to be replicated
in its perfect form, diamond
crystal is the only substance.
It thus helps to symbolize the
perfect ‘human’ in its body
frame and mind.
While conceiving the Vedic
verse at Sharda, time stretched long
enough and a compulsive need arose
to name ‘Lord Rudra’ to take hold of
the aboriginal world of men who were
there as Nagas and others. This Lord
is exclusively powerful who commands
the nature and dominates it The bare
Earth stretches under his naked feet
and the infinite Sky
above as the exclusive
roof. Attired in ‘Naga’
dress with a lioncloth of
animal skin,
a ‘trident’ for
defense, a
‘damaroo’ for
the music of it or to signal
to the fellow gentry whom
‘He’ represented as the
chieftain. ‘Rudra’ with
ferocious looks appeared
defiant. ‘Parshuram’, the
Ramayanic personality just
looks alike.
Shardians, having
obtained valid knowledge
had learned and spotted
most planets and celestial
bodies. They had inferred
about the zodiacal division of
the starry canopy. The interrelationship
of the sun and
moon to the earth was well
understood together with
their movement. The
rudiments of astrology too
were felt about seriously.
These people were well
equipped with the Sharda
language and literature with a strong
inclination to lay faith in the Creator,
with a closest affinity to mother figure
‘Sharda’. Rudra got in the fame of
imagination representing power both
of being the protector and destroyer.
To these people the sole interest in
life had been to locate and add attribute to the Creator. In response
to this objective they choose, for
intelligent birth and growth and gave
to the children, who they considered
as their basic endowment, to imbibe
without fault the entirety of nature. ‘
Self enquiry’ was practiced as an
essential are of learning. Without any
choice importance was to it.
Descend in Valley :
The confident Shardians from the
Indus (Krishenganga region) and
equipped with objective faith and
having snug the Vedic hymn
descended in to the valley of Vitasta.
This event could in all probability be
towards the beginning when the ‘Iron
Age’ is declared elsewhere. The
preferred route was across the valley
of Krishenganga (then Indus valley)
over the mountain tops to north of
Kashmir to Harmukh mountain, Lolab,
Kupwara (Wanghome), Baderkali, Handwara, Sopore, Wular-Manasbal, Tulmul, Hariparbat
- Vicharnag,
Harwan [around Dal Lake] Rainawari, Khrew, Bijbihara, Anantnag, Verinag - Vethvathur
(Vitasta source). The
migration in to the virgin land of plenty
must have taken several ages having
also picked up an objective to reach
the source of the sacred river Vitasta
in the wilderness of nature. Fewer in
numbers the Shardian Brahmin proved
to be explorer who besides locating new
abodes around water sources located
fertile pieces of land for tilling and
settlement. They were least hesitant
to co-habit with local tribal population
and loved to build bridges of corporate
living. The ‘Nilamat Puran’, one of the
oldest renderings of man, gives a
graphic account of these people with
details of their habitat and social
milieu. Life continued for another long
spell until when during pre-
Mahabartian time there was a very
large influx of population from the
‘Saraswat civilization’, which has long
history of its own.
Saraswati river in its majestic form
flowed from the Himalayas between
the River Satluj and River Yamuna.
Tectonic upheavals along the ‘Delhi-
Ridge’ changed the course of this river.
Following this event there was a 'river
capture’ in which the Saraswati River
lost its identity and turned into a
‘mythical river’ with mention only in
the classical literature of India’.
Studies have however, established the
river course of Saraswati, forming part
of the Indus basin. The reason for
migration of this population to
Kashmir, Banaras, Konkan, etc. is
therefore obvious. Migration to
Kashmir was excessively large one
being in close proximity and because
of the through acceptance at the level
of the ‘order’ of civilization. The
Brahmins from ‘Saraswati Valley’
found inviting compatriots in Brahmins
of Kashmir. Languages of the two were
‘Sharda’ for the later and ‘Sanskrit’ for
the Saraswats. In course of time
Sharda got retained as the language
of speech and Sanskrit as the
language of written expression.
Sanskrit got considerably enriched by Sharda, which believably has a better
phonetic command. Thus commenced
yet another spell of Kashmir history
through the Mahabhartian Period into
the present. When ‘Kalhan-Pandit’
picks up historical events. He picks
with Lord Shiva, (a social form of Rudhra), and all what is mentioned
in ‘Neelmata Puran’, into the origin of
Kashmir valley from Satisar Lake and
into a habitable place. Factually,
Kalhan’s historical treatise begins
with King Nila and the population of Nagas. ‘ Sharda (Sarda) is brought into
reference as a place where is there
‘Goddess Sharda’ and river Madumati
in Krishenganga valley. ‘Kalhan Pandit’
does not forget to introduce to us the
word ‘Saraswati’ along with ‘Sharda’.
Kalhan mentions that in Kashmir the
contemporaries of Kaurvas and
Pandavas up to Gonanda in the Kali
era, fifty two kings had passed in
oblivion. The descriptive in Kalhan-
Pandit’s Rajtarangini, as Jawaharlal
Nehru says, is the story of medieval
times and often enough it is not a
pleasant story. There is too much of
palace for intrigue and murder and
treason and civil war and tyranny… it
is the story of kings and royal families
and nobility, not of common folks… It
is a rich store house of information
political social, and to some extent,
economic.
The development of life solely in
economic sense alone was either not
understood or it was deliberated with
a secondary place by choice. Former
could be true because of the fact that
a lifestyle practiced very consciously
for an unknown period of time, was
essentially and uniquely even for the
entire population. This inference is
offered from what we gather from
historians who talk of a period earlier
than a thousand year and more about
the uniformity in living and
performance of a special chore.
‘Uniformity’ is stressed. It is equally
understood from the rural setting of
Brahmin families and not without a
strong support of their thought content.
Spiritual Values and Myths :
When we visualize a little more the
pre-historical state, it is clear that
Vitasta River, associated with
mythology, was a great allurement. It
symbolized the ‘Half Self’ of lord Shiva.
Without the grace of Shiva-Sakti, the
Progenitor, Provider, Protector, they
believed, life could not be a possibility.
In the land of plenty there was enough
room for selection of tillable land and
opportunity for penance, - an
obsessive occupation. While at Sharda
the community had created few
beliefs and myths, which they adhered
to as truths and in matter of fact
manner, two of these being Omkar and
Rudhra (Shiva). Srichakra,
represented the geometry of life, these
subjects and the universe. In their
earnestness ‘Srichakra’ was engraved
at Hariparbat, a prominent picturesque
hillock and named it as ‘ Chakrishoor’
or the abode of Goddess Sharika.
Around this site revolved most the life
of migrants from Sharda for a pretty
long period. This Goddess had a sway
over their lives, they believed that
nothing under the sky did exist
without Her sanction and stamp.
The ‘Goddess was eulogized as
the Mother supreme and
loaded with hymn after hymn
woven around her in praise of
her powers, love for her creation,
beauty and grace.
More myths and beliefs continued
to get accreted that involved more
localities with natural features, and
local geographic and physiographic
prominences. Meanings were given
and not without an attribute to each
with an added aura of mystery. In
search of the mystic and with a
genuine need, people were earnest
and therefore experienced the
associated urgency. In the process got
also added the instinct of explorer.
They discovered places around with a
real magic of beauty and carried gods
and goddesses to these places as a
gesture of reverence. In this way
entire Valley became a ‘ place of
pilgrimage’. Thus increased in
proportion the involvement and the love
of the land. Said a wise man but,
“Leave the land, abandon it if it gets
polluted and your faith stands
encroached by the lesser ‘ beings’. This
is told more in exercise of ‘tyag’ balidan
and non-attachment. This is being
considered as an attributive quality of
savants.
The mathematics of learning of
astronomy and astrology got
continuously refined and up-graded.
These subjects continued to be center
of interest for research. In fact these
subjects in course of time developed a
synonymity with the ‘ Brahmin’ name
from Kashmir and the place developed
into a center of
attraction for learning
and enrichment of
Indian theology and
philosophy, humanities
and literature. (That
literature, without
leaving trace, is
consumed by the vandals during the
later ‘poignant’ historical events).
Kashmir through the ages therefore,
gained the importance of being called
the abode of Gods. A pride of honor it
enjoyed all along. It is the land of
Brahma were spread in abundance the
fragrance of the Supernatural. It also
stayed as the living philosophy; the
code being 'Shiv-Shakti’, in brief the
core of Kashmir Shaivism. Here in is
told in explicit terms that, ‘ life is what
it is, live it in the name of the Creator’.
The life :
Privileged as they felt in the land of
beauty and plenty, the people stayed
undisturbed by any contemporary
happenings. They thus pursued a
principled living as householders and
as very active aesthetics. It was a
period, free from want, free from any
source of attrition and which is a
perfect corporate experience in the
state of harmonious living. A dawn of
understanding for the men and
women that human life was a great
boon not repeated often. This belief
was not without the accompaniment
of a strong intuitive feeling. The ‘pairpartnership’
was thus understood as
a transient opportunity and a
knowledge event to observe the exclusive gust
of stormy fire of life. That, ‘the event history has never to
be the same in the transcendence of time’, was a rational truth felt by every conscious soul. Nature was
considered to be the only endowment and source of life amenities and therefore,
not amenable to any level of
transaction. All this rendered nature as sacred
and also the ultimate provider. This philosophy negates any attempt at transacting business with any of
its produce or product. It would be a profane sin. The asset theory, so popular as of now, was therefore,
nonexistent, more so the liquid assets. Society was in its most nascent
stage hence a content of faith and trust
was observed in plenty. Requirements
were addressed as a need of each
individual and unit. Living in confirmation
with nature was a non-negotiable instrument. It is thus felt that
the society and the life in it
exhibited an inhibitive attitude of a stable
civil life, without fear
and non-coercive. ‘ Ebb
and Flow’ a
phenomenon that, might best explain
the aptitude of living, in
nature, with nature, by
nature and for the nature-Ebb
and flow explains Nature’s restlessness with it self before the Ultimate; symptomatic of a peaking
civilization where the divine is within the visible frame. This state of living and being continued for generations
without interruptions, wherein the people landed into an unfelt ocean of calm. It was a state free of terror, with
mind and intellect was available for wild flights in Human and Divine realms. The Brahmin equipped thus
researched in him self.
he ‘Mahabarat-Yudd’ is inferred
to have been an event, which
has taken place towards the end
of ‘ Dwaper- Yug’ and the
beginning of ‘ Kali-Yug’. It is an event
therefore about five thousand
years+ or the beginning of Iron
Age { {Late-Holocene}.
In Kashmir, Vitastians i.e. –
a unique assimilation of
Shardian-Saraswat Brahmin
population was an established
civilization. They had by now
observed the constellations and
observed also the Great Bear (Sapt Rishi ] and perhaps known
the implication of pole star.
The installation of
geometrically shaped ‘Tulmul
Spring’ was in commemoration
of ‘Sapt-Rishi Samwat’ the Sapt-
Rishi calendar. The Rig-Vedic
hymns were already making the
vibes. Kashmiri Brahmin, as
introduced and discussed by
now turns out to be a
distinguished breed of men –
women of yester years. They
love, worship emulate the
Nature. Their established belief
has been universal oneness. In
this kind of precept every thing
melts down to integral
brotherhood where the Nature
was a great support – rather the
only support. To these people by now Life
was never an unexplained phenomenon.
God is assumed to create, not
without being part of its Creation. Thus
it is an intrinsic system
in the ‘visible invisible’
syndrome of objective
world in which nothing
stands untouched,
unguided,
uncontrolled or
unobserved by
its Creator. What we may define
as God, it is an
omnipotent,
omniscient and omnipresent
entity. An
integral definition thus
brings God very close to humans
who enjoy the unique power of
introspectiveness. It involves
Humans and God equally.
Being introspective, Man is
ever in state of search. It is
because he is given to play
second fiddle in the equation of
creation. Man is but a Creator
too, and he knows it well. The
‘chick-egg’ riddle may not need
any complicated explanation.
Man created the ‘God Figure’
who out of itself had created the universe and His prototype the
Man. In this riddle it hardly
matters whether the ‘egg’ or the
‘chick’, each is for the other and
not without. Further the ‘Time’
as a factor in the equation of
creation, has a unique
obligation, in which the Creation
has to be a ‘singular event’.
Therefore the ‘riddle’ looses importance
if any. Subsequently to the Creation the
objective world is set on a long and an
evolving journey and ‘series of events’.
One of these events is the cause of
human 'civilization', which, S. Freud
says in his words, “began the first time,
when an angry person cast a ‘word’
instead of a stone”. Rudhra- the first of
the Lords in the Indian mythology briefly
appears to resemble this Freudian Man,
the torchbearer of human civilization.
Exactly then, the Brahmin from the
Indus valley - Shardian stock of Kashmir
stands as yet another earliest witness
to this dateless event.
Rudhra is initially sighted as the one
look- alike tribal Naga Highlander
occupying the snowy peaks of Nanga
Parbhat (could be a deformation of Nanga Parbhat). Anger is reflected in very attire
of otherwise demure Rudhra. It could be
a chieftain who controls and is a
protector too. The Brahmin from
Kashmir is thus obsessively nostalgic
about its Creator. The intimacy is very
special. It is rather an affair. If called
upon to enunciate, the Brahmin calls it
by Shaivism. It is a term meant to negate
any dual meaning to the ‘Creator-
Creation’ equate. That the seed holds the
tree is a sanatan expression and hence
calls for no deliberation. The great belief
that matter gets energized into form
through the Creator’s will is as profound
as the self-awareness.
Any exercise of will on the part of the
Creator or its prototype the Human Being
is bound to turn into seed and hence an
event in Creation. Time automation is
thus also a function of the Cosmic Will.
Its presiding deity is remembered and
propitiated as ‘Lord Shiva’. These
musings enliven this Brahmin for a
lifetime, careless and careful to exercise his conscious.
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